THE FOOLISH VOTER AND THE BOLIVIA IT DESERVES | EL ELECTOR SONSO Y LA BOLIVIA QUE MERECE

By Oscar Antezana:

Just days (not months) away from the elections, at least two trends have emerged. First: the two main opposition candidates are expected to get more votes than Andrónico. That is, it’s almost taken for granted that MAS is no longer a threat. But at this point, the worst sin is complacency. On one hand, most of the undecided and/or “hidden” votes could go to MAS—as has happened before. On the other, let’s not forget that the fraud machine is still in MAS’s hands.
Second: many say they’ll cast blank or null votes because Jaime Dunn has been disqualified. The perception is that the two main opposition candidates are just traditional politicians who offer nothing fresh or radical to change the country. With all due respect, that’s nonsense. A blank or null vote that could have gone to an opposition candidate—but doesn’t—clearly benefits MAS and the rest of the left. A blank or null vote is essentially a vote for MAS by default. Is that what you want? Do you want Bolivia to take that final step toward becoming another Venezuela?

In Peru’s 2021 presidential elections, something similar happened. Many people refused to vote for Keiko Fujimori out of “dignity.” Their argument was that they couldn’t vote for the daughter of a dictator (even though she was just 15 when her father Alberto was president, and completely removed from his decisions). So, they voted for the leftist Pedro Castillo—and we all know what happened next. Those voters were later mocked as “cojudignos” (fools for the sake of pride). If Andrónico becomes president, it will be too late for those voters to repent. There’s still time not to be labeled a “cojudigno.”

Antonio Gramsci once said, “History teaches, but it has no pupils.” So, to avoid being a foolish voter:

  1. Don’t fall for the “they’re all the same” excuse. If you believe “all politicians are corrupt” and vote mindlessly, don’t complain in five years that “they’re all the same.”
  2. Don’t pretend to be apolitical. Don’t say “I don’t get involved in politics” while constantly giving your opinion, voting poorly, and then complaining. Ignoring the country’s problems doesn’t make you neutral.
  3. Don’t vote with your gut—vote with your brain. Choose a national project.
  4. Don’t vote against someone; vote for someone.
  5. Trust candidates who speak about their plans and debate. If a candidate refuses to debate, it’s likely because they know nothing and fear being exposed as ignorant.
  6. Be skeptical of electoral promises based on wishful thinking (“lithium will save us”) or that don’t explain howthey’ll be achieved. In five years, if lucky, only the foundations to rebuild Bolivia can be laid—nothing more.
  7. Don’t distrust a candidate just because they’re well-educated. For some useful idiots, the more educated a candidate is, the less “connected” they are to “the people.”
  8. If a candidate speaks with poor grammar and hides behind claims of discrimination, it’s not because they’re “from the people”—it’s because they’re playing the victim and have neither the education nor the ability to govern.
  9. Be wary of “outsider” candidates. Just because they’ve never governed doesn’t make them better. Don’t trust political “saviors”—they usually have no team, no structure.
  10. Don’t believe everything you see on TikTok. Don’t rely on WhatsApp chain messages. Read the news from more than one serious source.
  11. Don’t trust candidates who only offer clichés like “It’s the right’s fault” or “We’re being threatened by imperialism.” That’s as far as their thinking goes.
  12. Don’t be swayed by good intentions alone. If a candidate says, “I’ll change the country” or “Justice for all,” check whether they have political training, a real plan, and a capable team.
  13. Don’t just vote for president and ignore Congress. Later, you’ll complain that “the president can’t do anything.” Don’t help elect a pack of incompetents.
  14. Politics isn’t just about “balls”; how you use them depends on the candidate’s gray matter.
  15. Don’t vote for whoever hands out a bag of rice.
  16. Don’t trust those who only show up during election season as if it were a sports event.

It’s essential that you vote—and vote consciously—because the opposition must win both the presidency and Congress by a clear margin in order to govern without MAS obstruction or extortion from the left. It’s sad to say, but Bolivia today is what it deserves—because the majority voted for MAS and the current rulers. We got what we chose. Who can we blame?

Let’s not be “too picky.” Many people claim all politicians are equally useless and corrupt. Well, there are degrees of uselessness, and degrees of corruption. They’re not saints—but saints don’t exist in politics. The real problem isn’t the politician; it’s the foolish, ignorant voter who puts them there, justifies them, forgives them, and reelects them, votes emotionally, or is a “cojudigno.” But it’s never too late. Even the perfect idiot can wake up.

If there’s no single opposition candidate, vote for the one who understands Bolivia’s problems—beyond just the economic ones. Vote for the candidate with political credibility, both at home and abroad. Vote for the one not tied to people or sectors. Don’t vote for someone who offers a slow, gradual transition. Great problems require bold solutions. Don’t vote for someone offering you the world in “rights”—it means they don’t understand today’s reality, don’t know what they’re up against, or will just turn Bolivia into another Venezuela.

Your vote this August 17 won’t just decide the future—it will decide whether Bolivia continues to exist as we’ve known it for the past 200 years. Much of what this article says is just common sense—but sadly, that’s the rarest kind.

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